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Content Marketing for Law Firms That Actually Produces Results

Everything you need to grow — one team, your fractional marketing department.

Most law firm websites are full of content that does nothing. Generic practice area descriptions copied from a template. A blog section with three posts from 2019. Pages that read like a legal textbook instead of answering the questions real people are asking.

That is wasted real estate. Every page on your website is an opportunity to rank on Google, answer a question your future client is searching right now, and move that person one step closer to calling your firm.

We build content marketing programs for law firms that turn websites into lead generation systems. Not filler. Not fluff. Content built on real keyword data, structured for search engines, and written for the people who need your help.

Book a strategy call. We will audit your current content and show you what you are leaving on the table.

Why Content Marketing Works for Law Firms

People do not hire attorneys on impulse. They research first. They Google their situation, read about their options, and look for answers before they ever search for a lawyer by name or practice area.

Someone arrested for DUI is searching “what happens after a DUI arrest in Texas” before they search “DUI lawyer near me.” A parent going through a custody dispute is searching “how child custody decisions are made” before they search “family law attorney.” A person injured in a car accident is searching “how long do I have to file a personal injury claim” before they start comparing firms.

This is how legal search behavior works. The research phase comes first. The hiring decision comes second.

Content marketing captures that research phase. When your firm publishes a clear, helpful page that answers the question someone is searching, three things happen:

  1. Your page ranks on Google for that query
  2. The reader sees your firm as a credible source of information
  3. That reader is now on your website, one click away from your contact page

Law firms that invest in content marketing build a pipeline of people who already trust them before they ever pick up the phone. Firms that ignore it hand those readers to the competitor who showed up first.

The Types of Content We Produce

Content marketing is not just blogging. A strong content program includes several types of pages, each serving a different purpose in your marketing funnel.

Practice Area Pages

The commercial core of your website. We write pages thorough enough to rank, clear enough to read, and persuasive enough to convert — targeting specific keywords with proper heading structure and strategically placed calls to action.

Blog Content

Blog posts capture the “what happens if,” “how does,” and “do I need a lawyer for” queries that represent people in the early stages. A single post can bring qualified traffic to your site for years.

FAQ Content

Properly structured FAQ sections with schema markup help your pages appear in Google’s “People Also Ask” results and featured snippets — content positions that show above standard organic listings.

Resource Guides

Long-form content that positions your firm as the authority on a subject. These pages earn backlinks, rank for dozens of related keywords, and serve as anchor content for your entire strategy.

Location Pages

Unique pages targeting city-specific keywords with local court information — avoiding the duplicate content problems that come from simply swapping out city names on a template.

How We Build a Content Strategy for Your Firm

We do not start writing on day one. Content without strategy is just publishing for the sake of publishing. Before we produce a single page, we build a strategy that tells us exactly what to create, in what order, and what each piece needs to accomplish.

Competitive Research

We analyze the firms ranking above you in your target markets. What keywords are they ranking for? How deep is their content? Where are the gaps in their coverage? This research tells us where the opportunities are and what it will take to compete.

Keyword Mapping

We identify every keyword with meaningful search volume related to your practice areas and locations. Then we map those keywords to specific pages. Each page targets a primary keyword and a cluster of related terms. This prevents keyword cannibalization, where multiple pages on your site compete against each other for the same search query.

Content Gap Analysis

We compare your current website against the keyword map. What pages do you already have? What pages are missing? What existing pages need to be rewritten or expanded? This analysis creates a prioritized list of content needs, starting with the pages that will produce the fastest return.

Editorial Calendar

We build a production calendar that schedules content creation across weeks and months. The calendar balances new page creation with content refreshes, prioritizes high-value keywords, and aligns with seasonal search trends in your practice areas. Family law searches spike in January. Personal injury searches increase during summer travel months. We plan for these patterns. You see the full calendar and approve it before production starts. No surprises. No guesswork.

Our Content Production Process

Every piece of content we produce follows a six-step process designed to ensure quality, accuracy, and search performance.

1

Research

We research the topic using authoritative legal sources, analyze top-ranking pages, and identify what a page needs to include to compete — word count, subtopic coverage, question patterns, and depth.
2

Outline

We build a detailed outline that maps the page structure, heading hierarchy, target keywords, internal link placements, and call-to-action positions. The outline ensures every page has clear organization before a word of body copy is written.
3

Draft

Our writers produce the full draft following the approved outline. Every draft is written at an 8th-grade reading level in active voice, with varied sentence lengths and short paragraphs optimized for mobile reading. We write for real people first and search engines second.
4

Legal Review

We send each draft to your team for accuracy review. You confirm that the legal information is correct, that the content reflects your firm's approach, and that nothing conflicts with your state bar's advertising rules. We do not publish content you have not approved.
5

Optimization

After your review, we finalize on-page SEO elements. Title tags, meta descriptions, header tags, image alt text, internal links, schema markup, and URL structure. Every technical detail is checked before the page goes live.
6

Publication & Indexing

We publish the final page, submit it for Google indexing, and monitor its initial performance. If we see opportunities to improve rankings in the first few weeks, we make adjustments quickly.

Our Content Quality Standards

The internet is full of legal content that reads like it was written by a machine or copied from a legal dictionary. That content does not rank well, and it does not convert well either. Here is what we hold every page to.

Written for Humans, Optimized for Search

We write at an 8th-grade reading level. That does not mean dumbing things down. It means using clear language, short sentences, and direct explanations. A potential client searching for information about their legal situation is often stressed, confused, or scared. They need clarity, not complexity.

Active Voice Throughout

Passive voice makes content feel academic and distant. "Your case will be reviewed by our attorneys" reads worse than "Our attorneys review your case." We write in active voice because it is clearer, more direct, and more engaging.

No AI Patterns

We do not produce content that reads like it was generated by a chatbot. No recycled phrases. No filler paragraphs that say nothing. No templated structures repeated across every page. Every page is written with original thinking and specific detail.

Accurate Legal Information

Legal content carries real responsibility. Someone reading your website might make decisions based on what they find there. We research every topic using authoritative sources and flag anything jurisdiction-specific for your review. Accuracy is not optional.

Conversion-Oriented Structure

Every page is structured to move readers toward action. Calls to action are placed at natural decision points, not just bolted onto the bottom of the page. When a reader finishes a section and thinks "I need help with this," the next step is right there.

The Compounding Value of Content Over Time

Content marketing is not a quick win. If someone promises you page-one rankings in 30 days, they are either lying or using tactics that will get your site penalized. Here is what a realistic content marketing timeline looks like for a law firm.

Months 1 to 3: Foundation

During the first three months, we build your content strategy, produce your highest-priority pages, and begin publishing. New content typically takes eight to twelve weeks to be fully indexed and evaluated by Google. You may see some early ranking movement, but this phase is about building the foundation.

Months 4 to 6: Traction

Pages published in the first phase begin earning rankings. You start appearing on page two or three for target keywords, and some lower-competition terms may reach page one. Organic traffic begins increasing. We use this data to refine our keyword targets and adjust production priorities.

Months 7 to 12: Growth

This is where content marketing starts to compound. Earlier pages climb into stronger positions. Newer pages benefit from the topical authority your site has built. Organic traffic grows month over month. You start receiving leads from pages you published six months ago, and those pages continue producing leads without any additional spend.

Year Two and Beyond

Firms that maintain consistent content production see accelerating returns in year two. Your site has built enough authority that new pages rank faster. Your library of content covers enough topics that you are capturing traffic across the full spectrum of search behavior in your practice areas. The cost per lead from organic content drops steadily because the content keeps working long after it is published. This is the difference between content marketing and paid advertising. When you stop paying for ads, the traffic stops. When you stop producing content, the content you already published keeps ranking and generating leads.

How Content Supports Your Other Marketing Channels

Content marketing does not work in isolation. It strengthens every other channel in your marketing program.

SEO

Content is the fuel that drives SEO performance. Without high-quality, keyword-targeted pages, there is nothing for Google to rank. Every piece of content we produce is an SEO asset that builds your site’s authority and expands your keyword footprint. Learn more about our SEO services.

PPC Landing Pages

Paid search campaigns perform better when they send traffic to well-written, conversion-optimized landing pages. The content we produce for your practice area pages doubles as landing page content for your Google Ads campaigns. Better landing pages mean higher quality scores, lower cost per click, and more conversions from the same ad spend.

Social Media

Every blog post and resource guide is a piece of content your firm can share on social media. Instead of struggling to find something to post, you have a steady stream of valuable content that positions your firm as a knowledgeable resource. Content gives your social media presence substance.

Email Marketing

Content provides the material for email campaigns to your contact list. A monthly newsletter featuring your latest blog posts keeps your firm top of mind with past clients, referral sources, and prospects who are not ready to hire yet.

Reputation and Authority

Firms with deep, well-written content on their websites are taken more seriously by potential clients, referral partners, and even other attorneys. Content is how you demonstrate expertise without saying “we are experts.” You prove it by the depth and quality of what you publish.

How Our Content Services Work With Our Copywriting Team

Content marketing and copywriting are related but different. Content marketing focuses on creating pages that rank on Google and attract organic traffic.Copywriting focuses on persuasive messaging that converts visitors into leads. Headlines, calls to action, ad copy, and conversion page language fall under copywriting.

At ARO Effect, our content and copywriting teams work together. The content team builds pages that earn traffic. The copywriting team ensures those pages convert. This coordination means your website is not just ranking well. It is also turning that traffic into phone calls and form submissions.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does content marketing cost for a law firm?

Content marketing costs vary based on the volume of content needed, the competitiveness of your practice areas, and how much existing content needs to be refreshed. Most of our law firm content programs range from $2,000 to $8,000 per month. We build a plan that matches your budget and prioritizes the pages with the highest return potential.

How many pages or posts should we publish each month?

Most law firms benefit from two to six new pieces of content per month. The right number depends on your current content library, competitive environment, and growth goals. Firms in highly competitive markets or with thin existing websites typically need more content upfront, with production tapering as the foundation is built.

Who writes the content? Do your writers understand legal topics?

Our content team handles all production. Our writers specialize in legal and medical content, which means they understand practice area terminology, legal processes, and the questions potential clients are asking. You provide input on your firm’s specific approach and review every page for accuracy before it is published.

How long does it take to see results from content marketing?

Most law firms begin seeing meaningful ranking improvements within four to six months of consistent content production. Some lower-competition keywords may rank faster. High-competition practice area terms in major metros may take longer. The key factor is consistency. Firms that produce quality content on a steady schedule see results compound over time.

Can you work with content we already have on our website?

Yes. We start every engagement with a content audit. Pages that are performing well stay in place. Pages with strong potential that are underperforming get refreshed and optimized. Pages that are outdated, thin, or off-target get rewritten or replaced. We do not throw away content that is working.

How do you measure the success of a content marketing program?

We track keyword rankings, organic traffic, page-level engagement metrics, and most importantly, leads generated from organic content. You receive regular reporting that shows which pages are ranking, how much traffic they are generating, and how that traffic is converting. Every metric ties back to the question that matters: is this content producing cases for your firm?

Let’s talk about your content. Book a strategy call and we will walk through the opportunities.

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Start Building a Content Program That Produces Cases

Content marketing and copywriting are related but different. Content marketing focuses on creating pages that rank on Google and attract organic traffic.Copywriting focuses on persuasive messaging that converts visitors into leads. Headlines, calls to action, ad copy, and conversion page language fall under copywriting.

At ARO Effect, our content and copywriting teams work together. The content team builds pages that earn traffic. The copywriting team ensures those pages convert. This coordination means your website is not just ranking well. It is also turning that traffic into phone calls and form submissions.